This book examines social status as a social mechanism and a social fact that strongly shapes how markets and organizations are regulated, managed, and preserved over time.The first part of this book identifies a number of organizational issues and managerial concerns that can be framed as being a matter of the cognitive perspectives of social actors, and better explained on the basis of such conditions. The second part demonstrates the analytical value of the concept of status in a variety of organizational settings and market contexts. In the three empirical settings, status does play a key role when resources such as legitimacy (in urban development projects), revenues from sales (in video game marketing), and access to venture capital (in life science companies) are distributed.This book summarizes and reviews the academic literature on status and organization studies, as well as providing valuable information for researchers conducting empirical testing. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of Organizations and Social Systems.
Alexander Styhre holds the Chair of Organization and Management in the School of Business, Economics and Law at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. His research interests cover a wide area of research, including innovation management, urban development activities, and institutional, legal, and regulatory changes in the economic system of competitive capitalism.
Chapter 1: Status as concept and social fact.- Part I: Theoretical perspectives.- Chapter 2: The manipulation of status: Causes and effects.- Chapter 3: Status and cognition: Decision making, policy implementation, and fallacies and biases in status ordered fields.- Part II: Empirical cases of status relations and their consequences.- Chapter 4: Awards and prizes as status-conferring devices in urban development settings.- Chapter 5: Attracting attention in digital consumer markets: Marketing indie video games through high status intermediaries.- Chapter 6: Status relations and associations in life science venturing.- Chapter 7: The social and economic significance of status in organization.
Ulla Eriksson-Zetterquist, Magnus Hansson, Fredrik Nilsson, Johan Alvehus, Helén Anderson, Charlotta Bay, Anna Bengtson, Emilia Florin Samuelsson, Peter Frii, Mikael Gidhagen, Nanna Gillberg, Jan Greve, Linda Höglund, Tobias Johansson, Hans Kjellberg, Hans Knutsson, Johnny Lind, Eva Lindell, Susanne Lundholm, Maria Norbäck, Cecilia Pahlberg, Jens Rennstam, Ebba B:dotter Sjögren, Pamela Schultz Nybacka, Alexander Styhre, Oscar Stålnacke, Peter Svensson, David Sörhammar, Fredrik Tell, Sofia Ulver, Linda Wedlin, Peter Öhman, Jacob Östberg
Ulla Eriksson-Zetterquist, Tomas Müllern, Alexander Styhre, University of Gothenburg) Eriksson-Zetterquist, Ulla (, Associate Professor, Gothenburg Research Institute, School of Business, Economics and Law, Jonkoping International Business School) Mullern, Tomas (, Professor of Business Administration, University of Gothenburg) Styhre, Alexander (, Chair of Organization Theory and Management, Dept of Business Administration, School of Business, Economics, and Law, Tomas Mullern